A cross-sectional study of Q fever in Camels: risk factors for infection, the role of small ruminants and public health implications for desert-dwelling pastoral communities
Abstract:Q fever represents an important ‘neglected zoonosis’, with high prevalences recorded across the Middle East region. Among rural desert-dwelling communities in the region, camel milk is largely consumed raw, due to perceptions of dromedaries as a uniquely clean livestock species mentioned in the Qur’an and Islamic hadith, while milk from other livestock species is usually boiled. As a result, camels present a unique public health threat among such communities from milk-borne pathogens, including C. burnetii. In… Show more
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